Abstract

BACKGROUND. Antithrombotic medications may increase the risk and severity of traumatic intracranial hemorrhage (tICH) after minor head trauma. OBJECTIVE. The purpose of this study was to determine the frequency, distribution, and clinical course of tICH in patients receiving antithrombotic therapy who present with good neurologic status after a ground-level fall. METHODS. This retrospective study included 1630 patients (693 women and 937 men; mean age, 80.2 ± 12.7 [SD] years) who underwent head CT after presenting to the emergency department after a ground-level fall between January 1 and December 31, 2020; all patients had a Glasgow Coma Scale score of 14 or higher and no focal neurologic deficit. Patients with tICH were identified on the basis of clinical reports. In patients with tICH, images from initial head CT examinations were reviewed for characteristics of tICH, images from follow-up head CT examinations (performed within 24 hours) were reviewed for hematoma expansion, and clinical outcomes were extracted from medical records. Patients receiving antithrombotic therapy and control patients (those not receiving antithrombotic therapy) were compared. RESULTS. The antithrombotic therapy group included 954 patients (608 receiving anticoagulant therapy; 226, antiplatelet therapy; and 120, both therapies); the control group included 676 patients. A total of 63 patients (3.9%; 95% CI, 2.9-4.8%) had tICH. The antithrombotic therapy and control groups were not significantly different in terms of the frequency of tICH (4.4% vs 3.1%, p = .24), midline shift (10.0% vs 7.1%, p = .76) or regional mass effect (33.3% vs 14.3%, p = .19) on initial CT. Hematoma expansion on follow-up CT occurred in 11 of 42 patients (26.2%) in the antithrombotic group and one of 21 patients (4.8%) in the control group (p = .04). Two patients required neurosurgical intervention, and three deaths related to tICH occurred within 30 days; all five of these patients were receiving antithrombotic therapy. CONCLUSION. Antithrombotic therapy use was not associated with an increased frequency of tICH, although it was associated with an increased frequency of hematoma expansion at follow-up. CLINICAL IMPACT. In patients with good neurologic status after a ground-level fall, the findings suggest application of a similar strategy for selecting patients for initial head CT, regardless of antithrombotic therapy use; if initial head CT shows tICH, early follow-up head CT should be systematically performed in those receiving antithrombotic therapy, though it possibly should be deferred in other patients.

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